Fox Park Timber Co. v. Baker

84 P.2d 736, 53 Wyo. 467, 120 A.L.R. 1020, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 26
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
Docket2078
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 84 P.2d 736 (Fox Park Timber Co. v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox Park Timber Co. v. Baker, 84 P.2d 736, 53 Wyo. 467, 120 A.L.R. 1020, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 26 (Wyo. 1938).

Opinion

*473 Riner, Justice.

This proceeding in error was brought by the Fox Park Timber Company as plaintiff in error to obtain the review of a judgment of the district court of Albany County in a case arising in connection with the Workmen’s Compensation Law of this State. The plaintiff in error may be at times hereinafter conveniently designated as the “Timber Company” or the “defendant.” Ellen Baker, widow of Oliver Baker, deceased, the other party involved in the litigation as defendant in error, may subsequently be usually designated as the “claimant.” The judgment in question made an award under the Workmen’s Compensation Law aforesaid in favor of the claimant and her minor children for the death of her husband, in several amounts, which the trial court found were proper to be made and required pursuant to the statutes governing matters of that character. These amounts appear not to be asserted to be erroneous.

However, the contention is presented and argued on behalf of the Timber Company that the district court was without jurisdiction. First, because the Timber *474 Company did not consider that the relation of employer and employee existed between Oliver Baker and itself and accordingly did not contribute and had not contributed to the Industrial Accident Fund on his account and also declined to file any report concerning the accident involved. Supplementing this view it is also said that the papers filed in the case by the parties were insufficient to permit the question of whether Baker was or .was not an employee of the Timber Company to be litigated. Second, because the employment in which the accident occurred was not one of the statutory extra-hazardous employments. Finally the argument is presented for the Timber Company that the evidence before the district court did not authorize it as a matter of fact to find that the relation of employer and employee existed between the defendant and Baker at the time the fatal accident occurred, but that the evidence properly interpreted required a finding that Baker then was an independent contractor so far as the work he was engaged in was concerned.

The accident resulting in this litigation occurred March 13, 1937. An “Employee’s Report of Accident,” as required by the Workmen’s Compensation Statutes of Wyoming, was filed March 25, 1937, in the district court of Albany County by Ellen Baker on behalf of her husband, wherein, among other statements set forth, the manner in which the injury was sustained was described, as was also its nature and extent; a description of the injured person was in said report supplied, together with the names and residences of all the dependent members of Baker’s family, and his employer’s name was given as the Fox Park Timber Company, its post office address as Laramie, Wyoming, the nature of its business as “hauling ties,” and the location of the place of work where the injury occurred as Woods Landing, Wyoming.

The same day this report was filed Mrs. Baker also *475 filed in said district court her application and claim for an award under the Workmen’s Compensation Law aforesaid, in which it was alleged in substance that her husband was injured while engaged in his duties in extra-hazardous employment for the Fox Park Timber Company, his employer, at Woods Landing in Albany County, Wyoming; that she had filed a report of said accident with the Clerk of the District Court of said County, as required by law; that said employee was injured thus: On March 13, 1937, Oliver Baker, deceased, was driving a truck in hauling ties for the Timber Company; his truck stalled in the landing on the Laramie River at Woods Landing; he then secured another truck to . give him assistance, and this truck backed toward the stalled truck; when deceased attempted to fasten chains to aid the stalled vehicle, the assisting truck lost traction and slid into the stalled truck crushing deceased between the two; that as a result Baker suffered a seriously crushed abdomen and intestines and sustained other internal injuries; that although he was immediately taken to a hospital and two surgical operations were performed upon his body, the injuries proved to be fatal.

After describing the injuries thus involved, it was alleged that they were not due solely to the culpable negligence of the injured employee; that an award of compensation from the Industrial Accident Fund of Wyoming should be made as provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Law of this State; that the employee’s death ensued as a direct result of these injuries ; that an award of compensation should be allowed for temporary total disability, medical, surgical and hospital assistance, funeral expenses and all benefits due his widow and minor children, as provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Law; that the employee at the time of the accident had as dependents his widow, Ellen Baker, and two minor children, Alice and John, *476 aged respectively five years and one. year and nine months; that claimant is entitled to and asks compensation for the injuries above described. Both the employee’s report and widow’s claim for compensation were verified in due form before the Clerk of the District Court.

As already indicated, the Timber Company filed no report of the accident, but expressed a desire to contest the allowance of the award. The matter was by court order set for hearing on July 19, 1937, copies of this order being in due course transmitted to claimant, the defendant and the Attorney General of Wyoming. On that date defendant presented its objections to the jurisdiction of the court, which were overruled, and evidence was submitted on behalf of the claimant, the material portions to be at this time considered being substantially as follows: A physician, Dr. Ewing, testified on behalf of the claimant that he made an examination of Oliver L. Baker on November 12, 1936, to determine if the man was physically fit to work, the examination being made at the instigation of Mr. Roach, President of the Timber Company; that this report was turned over to the Secretary of that Company. The doctor further stated that he was one of the physicians attending Baker after his injury, and it was found that he had a severe abrasion of the lower part of the small intestine and a severe bruise to the blood supply in that area, an injury to the mesentery, which was a serious one, and that the cause of his death was a direct blow to the abdomen.

Mr. Roach, the Timber Company’s chief officer, being called for the claimant for cross-examination under the statute, testified Baker worked as a trucker for his Company from September, 1936, to March, 1937; that he had a contract hauling ties, at a certain price per tie, and in that occupation he was to take care of himself, truck and everything else, buy gas, oil *477 and tires; that he was to be paid this stated price per tie after it was delivered down there at Woods Landing; that Carl Langendorf is the superintendent of the Timber Company; that the business of that Company is tie contracting covering the handling of the ties from the time the trees are first cut until they are shaped up and cut into ties and hauled and delivered down in the City of Laramie; that Baker was delivering the ties from the place where they were cut to a point on the edge of the river at Woods Landing.

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.2d 736, 53 Wyo. 467, 120 A.L.R. 1020, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-park-timber-co-v-baker-wyo-1938.